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COFFEE & COCAINE ( The Unforgotten Bloosm)

Cherry_Bloosm
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Synopsis
There are lives that unfold like open books— clear, visible, easily understood. And then, there are lives that are written in silence. Not because they lack stories, but because their truths were never meant to be read. In the quiet, frost-laced morning of a world still half-asleep, within the pale walls of a hospital that has witnessed more endings than beginnings, walks Aaggarttha Debberma— a woman shaped not by softness, but by restraint. She does not tremble before pain. She does not falter before grief. For she has learned, far too early, that the heart—if left unguarded—becomes a fragile thing. And so, she carries herself like winter itself— calm, distant, untouchable. Yet even winter, at times, must yield. For within a room long forgotten by time, where the air itself seems to have grown weary of waiting, lies a woman who has not truly lived for twenty years. Her breath, a fragile thread. Her silence, heavier than any spoken sorrow. And on a day that should have been no different from the last— something stirs. Not loudly. Not violently. But enough. A flicker in stillness. A tremor in the unseen. A moment that passes as quickly as it arrives— and yet refuses to be forgotten. What is a moment, after all? A mere passing of time? Or the beginning of something that time itself cannot contain? For Aaggarttha, it is nothing— and yet, it is everything. Beyond the quiet sanctity of healing hands and measured breaths, there exists another world— one not built on care, but on control. A world where power does not shout, but settles—firm, unyielding—like a throne no one dares to question. At its helm stands Indrajeet Shrivastava— a man whose name travels farther than his presence ever needs to. He has not merely built an empire. He has become one. Through years carved with discipline and decisions weighed in silence, he has woven a legacy so vast, that it touches lives he may never see, and alters fates he may never know. And within this legacy, bound not by chains but by blood, is Dakshinayan Shrivastava— a man who walks not in freedom, but in expectation. He is composed, as all strong men are taught to be. Measured, as all heirs are required to remain. Yet beneath that stillness— there lingers a question he has never quite answered. A longing he has never quite named. And though his world and Aaggarttha’s seem oceans apart— separated by purpose, by circumstance, by design— fate, it seems, is seldom concerned with such distances. For what is distance, when time itself conspires otherwise? Their paths do not collide in fire. There is no grand moment of recognition, no sudden unraveling of truths. Instead— there is quiet. A glance that lingers a heartbeat too long. A presence that feels… strangely familiar. A silence that speaks, though neither dares to listen. And slowly, like ink seeping through untouched parchment, their lives begin to overlap. But beneath these gentle crossings lies something far more ancient. Something untouched by reason. Something unclaimed by time. There are truths, you see, that are not buried to be forgotten— but to be protected. From whom? From the world? Or from those who might one day uncover them? Time is often mistaken for a healer. But time does not heal. It merely… waits. It waits for fractures to deepen. For silence to weaken. For the past to find its way back into the present— not as memory, but as consequence. And when it does— it does not ask permission. It takes. As Aaggarttha finds herself drawn toward questions she cannot explain… as Dakshinayan stands at the edge of something he cannot yet see… as the boundaries between what is known and what is felt begin to dissolve— a truth emerges, not in clarity, but in weight. This was never chance. It was always meant to be. A convergence—not of paths, but of destinies long deferred. A meeting—not of strangers, but of stories left unfinished. And at the heart of it all— lies a stillness so profound, it threatens to break.
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Chapter 1 - THE END IS THE BEGINNING!

11 November 2030

SSD Hospital, Kha-Chumpa

11:11 AM

Hospitals have a peculiar way of deceiving people.

Not through false promises or spoken lies—but through order. Through their rigid routines, their controlled environments, their almost unnatural cleanliness. They give the illusion that everything within their walls can be predicted, measured, and, if necessary, fixed.

That nothing escapes logic here.

That life and death obey rules.

It is a comforting thought.

And a dangerous one.

Because there are moments—rare, quiet, almost unnoticeable—when something happens that does not belong to medicine, or science, or reason.

Moments that leave behind a question no one can answer.

This was one of them.

"Good morning, Doctor."

The voice reached her before the face did.

Soft. Familiar. Routine.

Aaggarttha Debberma did not slow her steps.

"Good morning," she replied, her tone even, composed—neither warm nor distant, but perfectly balanced.

The kind of voice that reassured without effort.

She moved through the corridor with quiet precision, her presence cutting cleanly through the morning activity. Nurses passed by, attendants hurried along, distant monitors beeped in steady rhythm—life, in its controlled form, continued around her.

Her navy-blue scrubs fit neatly against her frame, the fabric crisp, untouched by chaos. Over it, a white coat fell in clean, straight lines. A stethoscope rested lightly around her neck, brushing against her collarbone with each step—a subtle reminder of responsibility.

Her hair was tied in a loose, messy bun, strands escaping carelessly, as though even discipline had limits.

Her face was calm.

Too calm, perhaps.

"Namrita didi," she called gently, pausing at the nurse's station, "sab logon ne breakfast kar liya?"

Routine.

Always routine.

Because routine gave structure to uncertainty.

It gave control to chaos.

"Yes, Doctor," the nurse replied with a smile.

"Good. Let's begin rounds."

Nothing unusual.

Nothing unexpected.

For a brief moment, the world remained exactly as it should be.

Then it broke.

"Doctor!"

The call came sharp—not loud, not panicked, but cutting through the air with unsettling clarity.

A nurse approached her in hurried steps, her breathing uneven, her composure barely held together.

"Emergency… VIP Room 219."

The word emergency was familiar.

Too familiar.

It should not have meant anything more than urgency.

But something in her voice was wrong.

Aaggarttha noticed it instantly.

Not panic.

Not fear of losing a patient.

This was something quieter.

Something deeper.

A hesitation.

Aaggarttha's steps slowed—not stopped, just slowed enough for her to look at the nurse properly.

In that brief moment, something unspoken passed between them.

A realization.

"Call Dr. Sachin," she said.

Her voice remained calm.

Unshaken.

But as she turned toward Room 219—

her steps changed.

The corridor felt longer.

The distance stretched, each step echoing more distinctly than before. The usual background noise—the distant chatter, the movement, the mechanical beeping—faded into something dull, almost distant.

As if the hospital itself had quieted down.

As if it was waiting.

Room 219 stood at the far end.

The door slightly ajar.

Aaggarttha pushed it open.

And immediately—

she felt it.

The difference.

Not visible.

Not measurable.

But undeniable.

The air inside the room was heavier.

Still.

A large window stretched across the wall, allowing pale winter light to seep in. Outside, two cherry blossom trees stood against the cold breeze, their fragile petals drifting downward in slow, almost reluctant motion.

The world outside moved gently.

Calmly.

Inside—

everything felt suspended.

On the bed lay Kalyani Bardhan.

A name that had long lost its identity.

A woman who had not spoken in twenty years.

Who had not moved in twenty years.

Who had existed—not as a person—but as a condition.

A living body without a voice.

Without presence.

And yet—

she was still alive.

Aaggarttha stepped closer.

Her movements were automatic now, guided by training rather than thought.

She checked the monitors.

Pulse—stable.

Breathing—regular.

Everything within expected parameters.

Too perfect.

Her gaze shifted slowly toward Kalyani's face.

Time had not been kind.

Fine lines etched deep into her skin, shadows settled beneath her eyes, her lips pale and still.

There was a strange stillness about her.

Not peaceful.

Not restful.

But incomplete.

Aaggarttha stared for a moment longer than necessary.

Something felt off.

"Kalyani," she said softly.

The name left her lips out of habit.

Not expectation.

Silence answered her.

Of course.

She turned slightly, ready to step away—

Then—

Movement.

So small.

So faint.

Her hand froze mid-air.

She looked again.

The fingers.

A tremor.

Once.

Then again.

Behind her, the nurse inhaled sharply. "Doctor—"

"Quiet."

Aaggarttha didn't turn back.

Her voice was low, controlled—but firm enough to command silence.

She stepped closer.

Her focus sharpened completely now.

"Kalyani…"

This time, it was not routine.

Not habit.

It was intent.

For a moment—

nothing.

Then—

The eyelids trembled.

Slowly.

Painfully.

As though resisting something unseen.

Then they opened.

Not fully.

Not clearly.

But enough.

Enough for it to be real.

Enough to break twenty years of silence.

Aaggarttha felt it then.

A shift.

Deep and unsettling.

Because those eyes—

they were not empty.

They were aware.

Searching.

Her breath slowed involuntarily.

Her heartbeat did not.

The room seemed to close in around that single moment.

Kalyani's lips moved.

Dry.

Fragile.

Almost lifeless.

A sound emerged.

Broken.

Incomplete.

Barely audible.

Aaggarttha leaned closer instinctively.

Closer than necessary.

Closer than safe.

"Say it," she whispered, without realizing.

But no words followed.

Only a faint breath.

And then—

A tear.

It slipped slowly from the corner of Kalyani's eye.

Tracing a silent path down her temple.

Disappearing into the pillow.

Aaggarttha froze.

She had seen tears countless times.

Pain.

Grief.

Relief.

But this—

This was different.

This felt delayed.

As though it had taken years to fall.

The machines continued their steady rhythm.

Nothing else changed.

And yet—

Everything had.

Aaggarttha straightened slowly.

Her expression returned to calm.

Controlled.

Perfectly composed.

But inside—

something had shifted.

Not fear.

Not shock.

Something far more dangerous.

Curiosity.

Because if a woman who had not moved in twenty years could suddenly open her eyes—

Then one question remained.

Why now?

And another followed—

What had she been trying to say?

Aaggarttha turned toward the door.

Her steps steady.

Unwavering.

But just before she stepped out—

she stopped.

Not because someone called her.

Not because something moved.

But because she felt it.

A presence.

A gaze.

Watching.

She turned back.

Slowly.

Kalyani's eyes were still open.

But they had changed.

They were no longer searching.

They were fixed.

On her.

And in that moment—

Aaggarttha Debberma understood something without words.

This was not an accident.

This was not recovery.

This—

was a beginning.

And whatever had just awakened—

was not meant to stay buried.